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National Cross-Site Evaluation of High-Risk Youth Programs, Making Prevention Effective for Adolescent Boys and Girls: Gender Differences in Substance Use and Prevention: Monograph Series No.4

NCJ Number
195820
Author(s)
J. Fred Springer Ph.D.; Soledad Sambrano Ph.D.; Elizabeth Sale Ph.D.; Rafa Kasim Ph.D.; Jack Hermann Ph.D.
Date Published
2002
Length
39 pages
Annotation
Part of the series “Points of Prevention,” this monograph investigates gender differences in youth substance use and prevention.
Abstract
From the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, the fourth monograph in the series “Points of Prevention,” discusses the issues of substance use and abuse, risk, protection, and gender. Data from the National Cross-Site Evaluation of High Risk Youth Programs study suggests gender differences in substance use and prevention. Following a comprehensive presentation of charts and graphs depicting gender differences in alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana use, this report argues that boys and girls respond to substance abuse prevention programs differently. While boys experience significant reductions in substance use following the completion of a substance abuse program, the benefits of such programs arise later for girls. This study further agues that female-only substance abuse programs are no more effective in reducing the rates of substance abuse than are mixed-gender programs and that girls report higher degrees of parental supervision than do boys. Figures, references